This is a comment on the fascinatingly complex semantic argument surrounding non-spectral colors, not that "pink things" themselves don't exist.
Warl0k3
I mean, my neighborhood is, and it's got 5x the population of the vatican. Also we haven't fostered a culture that has been a driving force behind centuries of globe-spanning persecution and child rape, which feels like it should count for something. We don't have to greenwash, we're already green (also my state is 75% of the way there and has ~8 million people so we're working on it)
That's kinda up for debate. Most people casually consider violet to be purple, and the distinction of it being a non-spectral color is a (fairly contentious) academic one.
Now pink, on the other hand, that's an unholy creation not of earth....
Since when does the US care what happens to it's citizens? What, they think Trump is going to consider this anything besides saving his admin time? Dude was brown, had a brown-person name and died in a middle-eastern country.
Well... yeah, those were both public sector enterprises.
But these six city blocks are so carbon neutral! Yay, the progressive vatican!
Hopkins didn't realise they had found a mass unmarked baby grave in a former septic tank — in a town whose name is derived from the Irish word meaning burial place.
But trans people are the real threat to our children....
Generally no, but submitting a bug bounty is very much a nontrivial amount of work in documentation alone.
A lot of them do, especially the secretly commercial stands that are getting all too common. Like the cat says, "you are not immune to ~~propaganda~~ advertising".
Yo they do this on purpose, you see it all the time with roadside stands. Weird and nonstandard signs are more attention grabbing and indicate a true smalltime business, so even commercial roadside stands are starting to have signage like this. You'd do well to give more credit to the intelligence of these people - the motivations behind why they're like this are invaluable when being forced to interact with them (be that interpersonally or politically), and can help a great deal when trying to preempt or mitigate the damage they can do.
Well that's a lot less of a hacky article than I was expecting - though they don't provide evidence that the claimed NSA audit actually exists, they do present a damn good case for investigating it further and a reasonably plausible vector by which the election results could have been tampered with. I doubt they were manipulated, truly the conservative bloc really is large and was far more motivated than the dems in the last election, but this is pretty solid reporting for a substack and I really hope something comes of it.
I'll spare you, but only if you share some coffee. Someone appears to have snuck in and drank all of mine...